by The Real Sandhurst Royal » 28 Feb 2010 17:07
by Row Z Royal » 28 Feb 2010 17:08
by Dickie Davies » 28 Feb 2010 21:02
by The Real Sandhurst Royal » 01 Mar 2010 18:40
by Royalee » 01 Mar 2010 19:40
by Terminal Boardom » 02 Mar 2010 22:17
Royalee Referees are coached poorly by people who don't understand the game, are obsessed with stamping their authority on games and are not helped by Sepp Blatter's Fifa Presidency during which he's brought in the most ridiculous ruling in recent history in the 'goalscoring opportunity red card' law.
by cmonurz » 02 Mar 2010 22:37
by eleventh earl of mar » 02 Mar 2010 23:11
by Terminal Boardom » 02 Mar 2010 23:12
cmonurz Ineresting comments from Poll, and highlighted in the Times, our former top referee saying that Dowd would have been looking for any possible reason not to send off Vidic, given the early point in the game, and the occasion.
It should be the job of the referee to apply the rules, not form an opinion on the spectacle.
by PlasticRoyale » 03 Mar 2010 10:43
The Real Sandhurst Royal Referees are a law unto themselves they seem to think they can make the rules up as the game goes on.
Phil Dowd in the league cup final should have sent Vidic off in the 4th minute he was the last man.
Time for the FA to seriously look how the games are officiated and how the rules are applied.
by Hoop Blah » 03 Mar 2010 14:33
Royalee Referees are coached poorly by people who don't understand the game, are obsessed with stamping their authority on games and are not helped by Sepp Blatter's Fifa Presidency during which he's brought in the most ridiculous ruling in recent history in the 'goalscoring opportunity red card' law.
by Tony Le Mesmer » 03 Mar 2010 18:30
by Dirk Gently » 03 Mar 2010 18:39
Steve Coppell If my players made as few mistakes as referees do we'd be top of the league all the time.
by Hoop Blah » 03 Mar 2010 18:42
by Jack Celliers » 03 Mar 2010 21:29
Hoop Blah I've always maintained that all youth players attached to professional clubs should go through a refs course. It would:
- help them understand the rules more
- help them understand the refs point of view more
- give something back to the local community as they'd also be made to ref kids and park football
- give them another route to stay in the game if they don't make it, they might just get a taste for ref'ing
by Sun Tzu » 04 Mar 2010 11:27
Hoop Blah I've always maintained that all youth players attached to professional clubs should go through a refs course. It would:
- help them understand the rules more
- help them understand the refs point of view more
- give something back to the local community as they'd also be made to ref kids and park football
- give them another route to stay in the game if they don't make it, they might just get a taste for ref'ing
by Franchise FC » 06 Mar 2010 13:29
Sun TzuHoop Blah I've always maintained that all youth players attached to professional clubs should go through a refs course. It would:
- help them understand the rules more
- help them understand the refs point of view more
- give something back to the local community as they'd also be made to ref kids and park football
- give them another route to stay in the game if they don't make it, they might just get a taste for ref'ing
And as all coaches in youth soccer must get at least a level 1 coaching qualification I would add that they should also do a basic course on the laws of the game.
I can never believe that anyone with a serious interest in the sport cannot be bothered to learn the laws which govern the sport ! Most cricket and rugby fans have a decent knowledge of the laws of their respective sports but football fans seem to be happy to remain ignorant, hence calls for red cards for being 'the last man', the belief that you can commit any sort of foul as long as you 'get a bit of the ball' and the inability to work out why linesmen don;t always flag offsides the instant the ball is played !!
by Royalee » 06 Mar 2010 14:52
Hoop BlahRoyalee Referees are coached poorly by people who don't understand the game, are obsessed with stamping their authority on games and are not helped by Sepp Blatter's Fifa Presidency during which he's brought in the most ridiculous ruling in recent history in the 'goalscoring opportunity red card' law.
You've let yourself down there with a massive factual inaccuracy!
Any self respecting Reading fan should know that the red card for a professional foul (one that denies a goal scoring opportunity) was introduced way before Blatter became President. Why? Because our very own Lawrie Sanchez was the first player to be sent off for it.
As it turns out FIFA didn't even want to adopt it and so the English League made it a local rule which was then picked up by FIFA for the 1990 World Cup.
Blatter wasn't made President until '98.
by Royalee » 06 Mar 2010 14:58
Terminal BoardomRoyalee Referees are coached poorly by people who don't understand the game, are obsessed with stamping their authority on games and are not helped by Sepp Blatter's Fifa Presidency during which he's brought in the most ridiculous ruling in recent history in the 'goalscoring opportunity red card' law.
What evidence do you have for this?
The problem is not the referees. They are the pawns stuck in the middle. My gripe is with the administrators who continually confuse matters with their poorly worded nonsense. The biggest problem facing referees is that they are no longer allowed to apply Rule 19.
by Hoop Blah » 08 Mar 2010 14:13
RoyaleeHoop BlahRoyalee Referees are coached poorly by people who don't understand the game, are obsessed with stamping their authority on games and are not helped by Sepp Blatter's Fifa Presidency during which he's brought in the most ridiculous ruling in recent history in the 'goalscoring opportunity red card' law.
You've let yourself down there with a massive factual inaccuracy!
Any self respecting Reading fan should know that the red card for a professional foul (one that denies a goal scoring opportunity) was introduced way before Blatter became President. Why? Because our very own Lawrie Sanchez was the first player to be sent off for it.
As it turns out FIFA didn't even want to adopt it and so the English League made it a local rule which was then picked up by FIFA for the 1990 World Cup.
Blatter wasn't made President until '98.
You've misunderstood me here - I know that players used to be sent off for a professional foul - Blatter replaced this with a law stating that players should be sent off for 'denying a goalscoring opportunity' which has made a mockery of the game. You punish players who have made honest attempts to win the ball once with a penalty in many cases and effectively punish them again with a sending off which is totally wrong yet you see players like Ricardo Carvalho professionally foul players in the middle third and rarely get punished. The change in the wording has caused massive problems and ruins many a game and Blatter's presidency is responsible for it.
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